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North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: Internic address allocation policy
> > In THEORY, once an address range is delegated to you it is YOURS. CIDR > permits "holes", that is, more-specific routes. > > Some providers try to force you to "give back" the address(es) when you > leave. MCSNet, and most others, do not. My view on this is that once you > receive an address consisting of at least a Class "C" block (ie: the last > octet is yours) then it is yours to keep -- period. > > For sub-C allocations there is no good way to delegate those, and as such > at present we view sub-C allocations as belonging to us, and I suspect most > other providers who are as aggressive as we are in delegating small pieces > of address space also view things in this fashion. > Looks like a double standard to me... The same argument could be placed for any subnet not on an 8,16, or 24 bit bound. Remember that consistant policy is a "Good Thing"(tm?) and something that works, -across the board- will last us longer than some simple haq that deals w/ current, broken hardware/software. (Will this policy work in 24 months?) -- --bill
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